Have Romplers Gone Mad?
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- KVRAF
- 1644 posts since 18 Mar, 2004 from Lincoln, CA
I think today's developers are far lazier when it comes to good programming. There's absolutely no reason why they can't have much smaller libraries and still retain great sound quality. If you take a look at stuff like Synful or Edirol HQ Orchestra--they are tiny in size by comparison, yet they can sound just as good if you know to use them right. If library developers actually bothered with clever programming, they could probably cut library sized by 50~70% and still retain the sound quality. I see no point is the ridiculous, obsessive sampling they do on every note, velocity, sustain..etc. Just how many people can REALLY hear that difference? That Moby example is great because I've heard and read so many other examples like it, where clever use of sounds from inexpensive and modest origins fooled "experts" into thinking they are far more than they are. So much for experts and audiophiles. It's all about diminishing returns when you spend thousands of dollars. You absolutely do not get thousand times better quality.
- KVRAF
- 8079 posts since 9 Jan, 2003 from Saint Louis MO
As the owner of a laptop with a 40GB drive, yes I think mega-romplers are crazy.
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2336 posts since 13 Oct, 2002 from Terra Firma
What if you want to play live with a laptop? That means carting around extra firewire drives. Not sure how a laptop would handle a couple of plugged drives on top of midi interface etc.foosnark wrote:As the owner of a laptop with a 40GB drive, yes I think mega-romplers are crazy.
Maybe it would mean compromising with smaller romplers when playing live somewhat defeating the purpose of buying huge sample sets.
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- KVRian
- 933 posts since 14 Jun, 2004 from Guanajuato, Mexico
I used to own a Korg X5D with 8 Mb of sample ROM. I still own a Wavestation SR with 4 Mb, and an Emu Proteus 2/XR with 8 Mb. I also have two samplers: an Akai S2800 w/10 Mb, and an Emu ESI-2000 w/72 Mb. I've never used that much memory.
I have used some big soundfonts such as nskit and splendid piano, but 32 Gb just seems a total exaggeration. I think I'll keep my old romplers and samplers.
I have used some big soundfonts such as nskit and splendid piano, but 32 Gb just seems a total exaggeration. I think I'll keep my old romplers and samplers.
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- KVRist
- 143 posts since 21 Jul, 2003
They should start distributing it as another harddisk not in DVDs or CDs. 32gb??..whoa...it's 2 gb more than my current HD, man. I believe in future they'll sell a small HD with USB or firewire or something similar. You just plug it in and you're done. just like another drive. Just like the add-on cards of keyboards. That would make sense.
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Mr. Slater's Parrot Mr. Slater's Parrot https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=2990
- KVRist
- 315 posts since 8 Jun, 2002
Yes, I definitely agree with the above. It does take forever to install the stuff. And, I haven't yet decided whether to buy backup drives for everything.Storage may have grown but the speed of data transfer hasn't really improved accordingly. Installing huge soundsets takes ages and back-up is not really feasible with such large amounts of data. I suppose it would be easier to reinstall the original than a back up anyway.
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- KVRAF
- 2565 posts since 30 Mar, 2004 from Phoenix AZ USA
Well I am not young but it seems like just yesterday that I was all excited about my new hard drive that reached the unheard of 1Gig of storage.
In about .... oh just a few years you wont be able to buy any hard drive that will be in Gigabytes.
The minimum will be in Terabytes.
So storage is not a problem but is bigger better?
Well not always but some of these mega romplers are just amazing.
(BFD comes to mind)

In about .... oh just a few years you wont be able to buy any hard drive that will be in Gigabytes.
The minimum will be in Terabytes.
So storage is not a problem but is bigger better?
Well not always but some of these mega romplers are just amazing.
(BFD comes to mind)
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2336 posts since 13 Oct, 2002 from Terra Firma
Yes, I think this is probably a motivating factor.Baxter wrote:I also suspect that another factor involved in their ever greater size is that it makes them much less likely to be stolen and distributed freely over the internet.
Baxter
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- KVRist
- 441 posts since 13 Feb, 2003
generally, as the wavestation was mentioned above, i always appreciate when there's a proper bunch of tiny single-cycles included.
installers could basically offer a custom install with sample sets to choose from...
installers could basically offer a custom install with sample sets to choose from...
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- KVRist
- 331 posts since 24 Mar, 2002 from Denmark
Doesn't work at all: http://www.google.com/search?q=BFD+XFL+torrentBaxter wrote:I also suspect that another factor involved in their ever greater size is that it makes them much less likely to be stolen and distributed freely over the internet.
Yes, and that would also make it a lot easier to copyprotect the content, encrypted partition with half the key in firmware, the other as user serial, watermarking the output etc. Actually a piece of "hardware" that streams to your "software". Will probably come to that sooner or later (not that that will work either in the long run of course).antardhyan wrote:They should start distributing it as another harddisk not in DVDs or CDs. 32gb??..whoa...it's 2 gb more than my current HD, man. I believe in future they'll sell a small HD with USB or firewire or something similar. You just plug it in and you're done. just like another drive. Just like the add-on cards of keyboards. That would make sense.
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Stupid American Pig Stupid American Pig https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=4753
- KVRAF
- 7065 posts since 25 Nov, 2002 from not sure
One thing I have noticed though is that size does not = quality. I have heard several Humungo sample sets that sounded bad, and wasted several gigs doing it...
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- KVRist
- 37 posts since 15 May, 2003
I wonder if a 1gig piano sample sounds 20x as good as a well made 50meg piano sample and when does the law of diminishing returns come into play when it comes to the size of multi sample instruments? There has to be a better way. I also don't understand why anyone would want to crowd thier harddrive with synth samples considering all the great synth VSTI's out there.
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- KVRAF
- 2139 posts since 15 Jul, 2003 from ex-NJ, PA
It's all in one placePoni wrote: I also don't understand why anyone would want to crowd thier harddrive with synth samples considering all the great synth VSTI's out there.
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- KVRian
- 966 posts since 28 Sep, 2002 from UK
I agree.munchkin wrote:I just noticed that the Collosus rompler is 32GB.![]()
Is that really necessary? I'm sure the sampling is pristine but in what situation would it be useful to have a GM sound module that size unless you were working in film?
I think romplers are going to get completely out of hand eventually. Perhaps Collosus is a one off but if romplers keep expanding it'll be necessary to have 4x400GB SATA drives just to house several romplers along with any accumulated samples already in our collection. Not to mention storing the growing size of song files as bit rate is increased.
I know there is no one forcing us to buy them but I'm trying to understand why they need to grow so large. Any ideas?
I'd like to know how much storage people here devote to romplers/samples/sound files and what they use to store and archive all this data?
I have 2x200GB SATA drives. Approx 60GB for soundfiles, 50GB for romplers and 80GB samples. This is a rough estimate because over the years I've bought a lot of sample disks and I also have the sample banks that came with the various samplers I've owned. There's a lot of freeware sf2 stuff stored on disk. And samplebanks I've made from hardware synth patches I've created. A lot of this isn't installed.
I usually archive song files on DVD.
Although I've got some romplers in the GB territory (Atmosphere, StylusRMX), and love them, there is defintely a law of diminishing returns.
I also use a Yamaha sw1000 with 4 plg cards in a Kenton plugstation as an integral part of my DAW.
Although old, the sw1000 still kicks it if used properly in a mix. The drumkits are especially useful.
And the PF piano card is brilliant - I use it all the time...based on a 32MB sample wavetable I think ?
No way does it sound 100th as good as, say, a gigabyte piano - especially out of the classical context.
BC
If God did exist (and he doesn't) he would answer to the name of Maurizio